Dear Reader and Friend,

For many of us, there are few degrees of separation from the unfolding tragedy in Gaza, the West Bank, and Israel. While I was not brought up Jewish, my extended family—cousins, aunts, and uncles—were. I lost relatives in the holocaust and have been the target of antisemitism. I have friends and students who are Jewish, Israeli, Muslim, live in the Middle East, and/or have family, friends, or relatives in the Middle East. In these last months, many have shared their pain about the scale and intensity of human suffering.

Over the last decade, like many others, the ongoing conflict and violence in the Middle East was in the background of my awareness. I had little understanding of the history and the traumatic causes and conditions that have driven current violence. Like so many around the globe, the shocking violence by Hamas on Oct. 7th and the horrific and continuing reprisal by the Israeli government has broken my heart and riveted my attention.

Since that day, I’ve sought how to best hold and respond to the immensity of this suffering. The decades have taught me that our wisest actions arise from full presence with all that is moving through us. We need to be aware of and intimate with our inner life so that rather than being hooked by fear or anger, we can touch the loss, grief, and caring underneath. My process of opening in this way has unfolded both in solitary practice and, importantly, with others.

In early November, my husband Jonathan and I attended a candlelight vigil held at dusk across from the White House. There were several hundred participants from different faiths, and a number shared their loss and grief as others served as compassionate witnesses. Between each sharing there was a beautiful silence, a pause for blessings. One person told about her family in Gaza going to bed alive, and being found dead the next morning in the rubble that had been their building. A man spoke about the murder of his friend, a woman in her seventies, by Hamas on Oct. 7th. Each sharing brought tears, and it was good and necessary to grieve together—to grieve for all who were suffering.

If we are to contribute to a pathway toward peace, we need to feel, to truly let in the pain of others, and to grieve. I led a meditation gathering for Israeli therapists who had been tending 24/7 to those most traumatized, and for a group of Israelis who practice mindfulness. Each group had time to share their losses and grief. One person’s three-year-old son was taken hostage, another recalled watching a parent killed, and another, whose brother lost his whole family. Many talked about how a gripping existential fear is now a constant part of their daily lives. Many shared a crushing sense of betrayal by friends for not recognizing the horror of Oct. 7th and the threat to Israel’s existence as a state…for not caring, for abandoning them.

I’ve also heard from and connected with many students and friends who are anguished by the mass slaughter and displacement of Palestinians in Gaza. We’ve shared our heartbreak at images of mothers carrying their dead children, children who lost both parents to the violence, the cruelty of being entrapped, without food and water, and the terrifying helplessness against indiscriminate bombing. My Arab and Muslim-American friends talk about their desperation and despair at the racism that dehumanizes the Palestinian people— the devaluing of Palestinian lives that lets the occupation, the injustice, and now, the carnage, go on.

Friends, the only hope for a more peaceful, loving world is for us to open our hearts to all who are suffering, to value and cherish all life.

Our society is so polarized into a sense of “us against them” that, for many and especially for those who are themselves traumatized, it’s not possible to empathize and grieve the losses of those considered on the other side. Rather, they are objectified and perceived as bad others. This bad othering locks us in limbic reactivity, and our views and actions become shaped by fear and hatred. Othering also brings indifference to the unspeakable torment that so many humans— mothers, fathers, siblings, children—are living with right now.

Friends, the only hope for a more peaceful, loving world is for us to open our hearts to all who are suffering, to value and cherish all life. From that inclusive and compassionate presence, we will naturally seek to relieve suffering. It is our caring, not fear or anger, that can guide us in expressing our inner spirit with wise action. And act we must. We belong to this world, and we impact others with our silence or words, our passivity or activity.

In contemplating how best to serve, it helps to pose a deep inquiry to our own heart: What is love asking from me here? Let me share what has emerged for me from this question.

  • My heart knows that I need to keep connecting inwardly, so I’m aware of habitual fears and biases, and intimate with loss and grief. When there’s an awake tender presence with my inner life, there’s a natural compassion and feeling of belonging with other beings.
  • My heart asks that I continue to deepen my understanding of the historic trauma, causes, and conditions leading up to this conflict, violence, and suffering. And that I remember that humans are not the enemy; it is the universal forces of greed, hatred, and delusion that take over and lead to violence and suffering.
  • My heart asks that I recognize and name as harmful, any actions that violate others and create suffering. This would include, the violence by Hamas and the current and ongoing indiscriminate killing of Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank perpetrated by the Israeli government.
  • My heart asks that I recognize and name as harmful antisemitism, islamophobia, racism, and any dominance hierarchy that leads to hatred and/or violation of other beings.
  • My heart does not conflate Jewish and Israeli people with the actions of a right-wing Israeli government. My heart does not conflate the Palestinian people with Hamas.
  • My heart honors the rights of Palestinians to seek liberation from oppression; to pursue justice, equality, and dignity; and honors the rights of Israeli and Jewish people to exist and seek safety.
  • My heart realizes that how we seek for what we long for determines what unfolds in the future. Martin Luther King and so many spiritual leaders have expressed what is also found in the Buddhist texts: Hatred never ceases by hatred, but by love alone is healed. This is the ancient and eternal law. If Israel, in the process of trying to destroy an enemy that has committed atrocities, kills and displaces a huge portion of the population in Gaza, its violence will only beget more violence.

From these understandings and from deep caring, I feel called to use my words and actions in support of an immediate and complete ceasefire in Gaza and the West Bank, a return of all hostages, and expedited and meaningful humanitarian aid for Gaza.

I feel called to use my words and actions in support of an immediate and complete ceasefire

At this time, this is what seems wise to me, and in all humility, I realize I have my own conditioning, biases, and places of not seeing. As I continue to pay attention, my understanding and views will evolve.

My hope for each of you is that you will pause and keep connecting inwardly to your presence and to your awake and tender heart—that you will consciously include the suffering of all in your heart, and then inquire deeply as to what love wants from you.

We belong to this world; may we be blessed to speak and act from love, may we plant seeds of peace.

I am deeply grateful to all for your company on the path of awakening.

With love, blessings, and prayers for our world,

Tara

P.S. If the above perspective resonates and you are seeking ways to be more active, some organizations you might check out are:

I also highly recommend the following:

The piece was edited and adapted from an article that was first published on Dec 26, 2023 on https://www.tarabrach.com. © Tara Brach.

 

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